One side of a 10th century cross shaft fragment embedded in the wall of a 19th Century porch in St Cuthbert’s Church, Forcett, North Yorkshire. The otherside of the fragment is visible in the outside wall and at https://skfb.ly/ozItQ . On this side, three boars surround the top arm of a ‘lorgnette’ cross. In her Corpus of Anglo Saxon Stone Sculpture entry, Rosemary Cramp writes, “The unique and prominent depictions of the boars are an interesting feature of this shaft. The boar was one of the beasts particularly sacred to Freyr, the (Norse) god of fertility, and in one instance a boar and sow were associated with the land-taking in Iceland of a man called Helgi, ‘a man of mixed beliefs’ (Turville-Petre 1964, 166). It is at least possible that this monument was raised by a newly converted Scandinavian settler, and that it proclaimed his land right as well as his nominal conversion.” see https://chacklepie.com/ascorpus/catvol6.php?pageNum_urls=94
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